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Murder Is Binding

Page 8

by Lorna Barrett


  Ginny brightened. “Get ready for the ladies of the Red Hat Society. It’s showtime!”

  Soon after Ginny left for the evening, the store emptied out as well. All except for Mr. Everett, who sat in his favorite chair in the nook, nose buried in a paperback copy of John D. MacDonald’s The Scarlet Ruse, being careful not to crease its binding. Tricia lowered the shades, closed down the register, and counted the day’s receipts, locking them in the safe before disturbing him. “Closing time,” she said.

  Mr. Everett looked up, glanced at the clock, which read 7:05. “I’m sorry, Ms. Miles. I was so entranced…” He slid a piece of paper inside the book to hold his place, and stood, about to replace it on a shelf.

  “Just a moment,” Tricia said and took the book from him. As she suspected, his bookmark was indeed one of the nudist tracts. “You wouldn’t know anything about these, would you, Mr. Everett?”

  Mr. Everett looked both embarrassed and aghast. “Certainly not. But I will admit to finding more than a dozen of them in the last day or so.”

  “You haven’t seen who it was who put them inside the books, have you?”

  “No, but I have been watching the customers in an effort to put an end to it. I’m sorry to say I haven’t caught the culprit. I know everyone in the village and can’t say I’ve seen any come in, so it must be an outsider.”

  “My sentiments exactly.” Tricia turned for the sales counter and a little basket holding author promotional bookmarks. “We’ll save your place with one of these, okay?”

  Mr. Everett lowered his head, his cheeks reddening. “Thank you, Ms. Miles.”

  “See you tomorrow?” she asked.

  “Bright and early,” he promised, the hint of a smile gracing his lips.

  Tricia walked him to the door, closed and locked it, spying a sheriff’s cruiser slowing, its driver craning his neck to check out her shop. Her cheeks burned as she lowered the shades on the windows and commenced with the rest of her end-of-day tasks, tidying up and running the carpet sweeper across the rug. With Ginny gone early, every task seemed to take extra time, or maybe she was just dragging her feet. The idea of violating the sanctity of Doris Gleason’s home bothered her. Then again, it bothered her more that the sheriff still seemed to think she was the prime suspect in the murder and might be staking out her store.

  Maybe the deputy had been checking out Doris’s shop, not Haven’t Got a Clue. But if that was true the driver should’ve speeded up when he’d passed the Cookery, not slowed down.

  Miss Marple patiently waited at the door to the apartment stairs. Tricia cut the lights and headed for the back of the shop when a furious knock at the door caught her attention. Miss Marple got up, rubbed eagerly against the door, and cried.

  The knocking continued.

  “Now what?” Tricia groused. Guided by safety lighting, she crossed the length of the shop, ready to tell whoever was at the door that she was closed. Pulling aside the shade, she saw Angelica balancing a tray on her knee, holding on to her huge purse, and about to knock again. Tricia opened the door. “Ange, what are you doing here?”

  “I brought you dinner.” She bustled into the shop, leaving behind the scent of her perfume. “Why is it so dark in here?”

  “The store is closed. And you don’t have to bring me dinner every night.” She took a sniff—bread? Sausage? Heavenly!—and realized that her bisque lunch had been many hours before. “Let me take the tray. Follow me, and don’t step on Miss Marple when we get to the door.”

  Angelica muttered something about “that damn animal,” but followed. Tricia hit the light switch and the little gray cat scampered up the steps ahead of them, with Angelica complaining about the three-flight trek and the lack of an elevator.

  Tricia balanced the tray and opened the apartment door, hitting the switch and flooding the kitchen with light. She set the tray down and lifted the dishcloth covering the evening’s entrée. It looked like a meatloaf-shaped loaf of bread. “Stromboli?” she asked.

  A breathless Angelica nodded. “And a thermos of the most amazing lobster bisque you’re ever likely to eat.”

  Tricia stifled a laugh. “You don’t say. Where did you get it? At a clam shack?”

  “I made it.” Angelica set down her gargantuan purse on the counter and leaned against it, still panting.

  “I really appreciate you feeding me, Ange, but I don’t want to make you wait until after my shop closes just to eat dinner.”

  “Darling, on the Continent they don’t dine until nine or ten.”

  “And where are you cooking all this stuff, anyway?”

  “At the inn. I’ve made friends with the executive chef, François. He’s learned a few things from me, too.” She turned to her suitcase-sized purse and withdrew a bottle of red wine. “Where’s the corkscrew?”

  “No wine for me. I’m going out later.”

  Angelica set the bottle down, shrugged out of her suede jacket, and hung it on the coatrack just inside the door. “Where are we going?”

  “Not we, me. Besides, I’m not sure what I’ve got planned is exactly legal.”

  Angelica’s eyes flashed. “Ooh, this sounds like fun. What’ve you got in mind?”

  “Someone told me where to find the key to Doris Gleason’s house. I’m hoping I might find something the sheriff could use in her investigation.”

  “And what makes you think you could do a better job than the sheriff?”

  “Well, I have read thousands of mysteries.”

  “That’s true. I’ll bet you’ve got so much vicarious experience you could open your own investigation service.”

  Tricia frowned. “Sarcasm doesn’t become you.”

  Angelica advanced on the stove, turning on the oven. “Well, just listen to yourself. Got a cookie sheet handy?”

  Arms crossed over her chest, Tricia nodded toward the cabinet next to the stove. Already acquainted with some other portions of the kitchen, Angelica found aluminum foil in another cupboard, tore a sheet, and pressed it over the tray. “The stromboli should only take ten minutes to reheat. Why don’t you set the table?”

  Why don’t you stop ordering me around in my own kitchen? Tricia felt like shouting. Instead she gathered up plates, bowls, and spoons. Miss Marple sat beside her empty dinner bowl and complained loudly. “And you, too,” Tricia hissed and picked up the dish, putting it in the sink to soak.

  By the time she’d fed the cat, Angelica had popped the bread into the oven and was pouring the soup into a copper-bottomed pan to reheat as well. “Did you know there was a sheriff’s car parked down the street from here? Looks like they’ve got you under surveillance.”

  The heat returned to Tricia’s cheeks. “That’s why I want to go to Doris’s house. The sheriff still has an unnatural fixation on the idea that I might’ve killed her.”

  “Or they could just be watching her shop—maybe waiting for the killer to return to the scene of the crime.”

  “There’s nothing to return to. Bob Kelly emptied the place out this afternoon.”

  “I heard about that.”

  Was there nothing the local gossip mill missed?

  The yeasty aroma of bread filled the kitchen, and Tricia’s stomach gurgled in anticipation. Angelica leaned against the counter. “You can’t go out the front door without the deputy seeing you, so I think it best if I leave first, swing around and pick you up in the alley behind the store.”

  “Wait a minute, you’re not going with me.”

  “How much investigating do you think you can pull off with a tail?”

  “How do you know so much about police procedure?”

  Angelica rolled her eyes. “I do have a television, you know. I’ve seen enough crime shows over the years to have as much investigative experience as you.”

  “Television? Please. The scientific blunders alone have every jury in the country believing you can pull forensic evidence out of thin air, and they expect it in minutes when the reality is that most police departments ar
e understaffed, and most labs underfunded and overworked, and—”

  “What’s that got to do with us checking out Doris Gleason’s house?” Angelica turned, plucked a wooden spoon from the utensil crock on the counter, and stirred the soup.

  “We are not going to do it. I am. Do you realize how much trouble I’d be in if I was caught? What kind of sister would I be to put you in that same situation?”

  “Then who’s going to act as your lookout? You can’t search the place if you’re looking over your shoulder every minute.”

  Tricia hadn’t considered that. She changed tacks. “I don’t know if the house is on a well-lit street, if the neighbors would be watching. I’m not even sure I can go through with it. I just thought I’d drive out there and take a look.”

  “Then there’s no harm in me going with you. Here, try some of the soup.” Angelica held out the spoon.

  Tricia tasted it, surprised at its robust flavor. She took another taste. It was even better than the bisque at Ed’s—something only hours before she would have thought impossible. “Where did you learn to cook like this?”

  Angelica shrugged. “Let’s get back to the subject of searching Doris’s house. Do you have any latex gloves? We don’t want to leave a bunch of fingerprints.”

  “We don’t need gloves. It wasn’t a crime scene. I have no intension of committing a misdemeanor by breaking in if I can’t find the key.”

  “Party pooper.”

  “Why are you so hyped to come along, anyway?”

  Angelica smiled coyly. “Because it just might be fun.”

  SEVEN

  Doris Gleason’s little white cottage had seen happier days, as evidenced by its peeling paint, rusty metal roof, and the overgrown privet that adorned the west side of the property. As Ginny promised, a gravel driveway circled to the back of the dark house, affording the perfect cover for Angelica’s rental car. She killed the lights and the yard was engulfed by the night. The engine made tinking noises as the sisters waited for their eyes to adjust to the darkness.

  Angelica spoke first. “The woman didn’t have a whole lot in her life, did she?”

  Tricia shook her head. “I wonder if she owned the place or if it was a rental. She probably spent more time at the Cookery than here anyway.”

  “How long are we going to sit here?” Angelica asked.

  “Give me a minute,” Tricia said, looking over the darkened yard. Now that they were here, poking around the dead woman’s home seemed like a bad idea—more than that, creepy. Okay, the house was isolated, its nearest neighbor at least a quarter mile in either direction. With the drapes pulled shut there was little chance they’d be seen by passing cars, but just what did Tricia hope to find? A big red sign pointing to a will or an insurance policy?

  Tricia reconsidered their quest. “I think we’d better go.”

  “Oh, come on,” Angelica urged, “where’s your sense of adventure?” She reached behind her and dragged out the convenience store bag, extracting the big orange flashlight they’d stopped to buy along the way. She fished out the D batteries and filled the empty compartment, switching it on. An ice white beam of light pierced the car’s darkness.

  “Not in the eyes,” Tricia complained, putting a hand up to shield her face.

  “Sorry. Now where’d you say the extra key was hidden?”

  “It’s supposed to be under a fake rock by the back door.”

  “Right.” Angelica opened her door, but Tricia’s hand on her arm stopped her.

  “Before we do anything else, here.” She reached into her jacket pocket and pulled out a pair of latex gloves and handed them to Angelica. “I changed my mind. I decided you were right and we shouldn’t leave any fingerprints behind.”

  “Whoa. That’s a first. Me, with a good idea? Can I stand the compliment?”

  “You’re making me paranoid.”

  “Where did you get them?” Angelica asked, pulling a glove over her left hand and flexing her fingers.

  “The hardware store. I bought them for a refinishing job I never got around to doing.” Tricia put on her own set of gloves, got out of the car, and marched toward the darkened house. Angelica followed, their feet crunching on the gravel drive. Good thing it wasn’t raining. Tricia didn’t want to track in any detritus and leave any other evidence that they’d been there.

  The flashlight’s beam whisked back and forth around the steps. “I don’t see any fake rocks. How long ago did your little helper say it was that she used it?”

  Tricia went rigid. “I never said it was Ginny.”

  “Don’t give me that look,” Angelica chided. “Who else would it be? You don’t talk to anybody from around here except her. I’m assuming she either once worked for Doris or moonlights as a burglar.”

  “Yes,” Tricia reluctantly admitted, “she worked for Doris for a couple of months before she came to work for me.” She explained why Ginny hadn’t accompanied her on this little expedition.

  Drooping perennials and overgrown grass along the back of the house made it difficult to search for the pseudorock. “Be careful,” Tricia whispered. “Don’t step on the flowers. If the sheriff comes out here again, we don’t want her to know someone’s been snooping around.”

  “I think I’ve got it,” Angelica said.

  Tricia hurried over. Using the flashlight, Angelica held back a swath of grass. A little white plastic rock sat sheltered by the greenery. She lifted it up and a fat worm recoiled at being disturbed.

  “Oh, ick!”

  “Grow up,” Tricia warned, still whispering. The key was embedded in the dirt, bringing a small clod with it as Tricia picked it up. “Nobody’s used it for a long time.”

  “Why are we whispering?” Angelica asked.

  Tricia cleared her throat. “Come on.”

  She wiped the dirt from the key, stepped up to the back door, and inserted it in the lock. She turned it, grasped the handle, and let herself in. Fumbling around the door, Tricia found the light switch, flipped it, and a meager glow emanated from the kitchen’s single, overhead fixture.

  Angelica crowded against her. “Move over.”

  The tiny off-white kitchen was tidy with signs of a life interrupted. A newspaper sat neatly folded on the white painted table. A solitary coffee-stained mug occupied the dry stainless-steel sink. A stack of opened mail on the counter awaited consideration. Dusty footprints marred the otherwise clean, but dated dark vinyl floor—no doubt those of the sheriff and her deputies.

  “Prisons look homier than this,” Angelica offered.

  She was right. Not a picture, an ornamental hanging plate, or even a key rack decorated the bland walls. No curtains, just a yellowing blind hung at half-mast over the room’s only window. Tricia fought the urge to pull it down completely.

  “Creepy,” Angelica muttered.

  “My sentiments exactly. And how would I feel if this were my home being violated by a couple of strangers?” Tricia wondered aloud. Still, she swallowed down the guilt and stepped into the darkened, narrow hallway, with Angelica so close on her heel she could feel her sister’s breath on the back of her neck.

  The light overhead flashed on, and Tricia’s heart pounded. She whirled to find Angelica with her hand still on the switch. “Sorry.”

  Tricia ground her teeth, hoping her glare would scorch.

  “Looks like a bedroom here,” Angelica said, poking her head into a darkened room. She found that light switch, too. The smell of old paper and leather permeated the space. A twin bed wedged into the corner was made up, the patchwork quilt covering it the only splash of color in the room. On the small nightstand next to it was an open book and a pair of reading glasses, looking like they awaited their owner. The walls were floor-to-ceiling bookshelves stuffed with old tomes, while stacks of homeless books stood in front of the bottom shelves. Tricia stepped closer to examine the titles nearest her.

  “Are they cookbooks?” Angelica asked eagerly.

  Tricia shook her head. “No.
But wow—!” She picked out a dark volume, holding it reverently as her trembling fingers fumbled to turn the pages for the copyright information. She let out a shaky breath, throat dry, making it hard to speak. “It’s a first edition.”

  “Of what?”

  “Dickens. A Tale of Two Cities.”

  “Must be worth a few bucks, huh?”

  Tricia turned on her sister, ready to lecture, but the passive expression on Angelica’s face told her she didn’t have a clue about antique books, their intrinsic value, and there was no way she could readily explain it, either. “Yeah, it’s worth a few bucks.” She drank in some of the other titles, their brittle leather covers and the gold lettering on their spines making her catch her breath. Alcott, Alger, Emerson, Hawthorne, Melville, Thoreau, Twain, Whitman—the quintessential collection of nineteenth-century American authors. The only author missing was Edgar Allan Poe—and a good thing, too, or Tricia might have been tempted to—

  “My God, if they’re all first editions, there’s a fortune in this room alone.”

  “I thought you said Doris only sold cookbooks.”

  “That’s what her store was dedicated to, but obviously her taste in literature was much more discerning.”

  Angelica shrugged. “If you say so,” and she trotted out of the room. Tricia fought the urge to touch each and every one of the spines, and backed out of the room, turning off the light and silently closing the door with a respect usually held only for the dead.

  A trail of lights led to the living room. Angelica stood in the middle of the worn and dingy, putrid green wall-to-wall carpet, sizing up the space, which, like the bedroom, was primarily a storage place for books, though the shelves here seemed to hold mostly contemporary fiction. “Lousy taste in furniture,” she said at last, her gaze fixed on the olive drab sofa, its lumpy cushions and sagging springs declaring it a reject from the 1960s. “You’d think with all those valuable books, she’d live in a space to show them off.”

  “Maybe that was the point,” she said. “She could only afford them if she lived like this.”

  Angelica shook her head. “Not my life choice.”

 

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